



The Strongest Heart
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
From beloved middle grade author Saadia Faruqi comes a poignant exploration of the impact of mental illness on families—and the love and hope that it takes to begin telling a different tale.
Mo is used to his father’s fits of rage. When Abbu's moods shake the house, Mo is safe inside his head, with his cherished folktales: The best way to respond is not to engage. Apparently, his mama knows that too—which is why she took a job on the other side of the world, leaving Mo alone with Abbu.
With Mama gone, the two move to Texas to live with Mo’s aunt and cousin, Rayyan. The two boys could not be more different. Rayyan is achievement-driven and factual; Mo is a “bad kid." Still, there is a lot to like about living in Texas. Sundays at the mosque are better than he’d expected. And Rayyan and his aunt become a real family to Mo.
But even in a warm home and school where he begins to see a future for himself, Mo knows that the monster within his father can break out and destroy their fragile peace at any moment…
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Thirteen-year-old Mohammed Mirza believes that rather than admitting he's struggling, it's easier to pretend that he doesn't care about anything—neither his unemployed Pakistani American father's untreated paranoid schizophrenia, nor his white-cued scientist mother, who has abandoned the family for work in Greece. Then Abbu and Mo move from New York City to Houston, a change that prompts an extreme perspective shift for Mo. Now cohabitating with Abbu's widowed sister, Naila Phupo, and her son, Rayyan, also 13, Mo feels like he's seeing how "normal people" live for the first time. Because, to Mo, nothing about his life with Abbu is normal. "This is the story of the boy and the monster," Faruqi (the Holidays and Celebrations with Yasmin series) writes in a prologue, immediately setting the stage for this intensely gripping story in which Mo learns more about his father—and himself—and comes to terms with how Abbu's mental illness affects their life and their relationship. Organic details about living with a mentally ill parent, informed by Faruqi's own childhood, as addressed in an author's note, make for a powerful and revealing read. Ages 8–12.